Monday, November 4, 2019

Up-rooted



Torn from their place,
bunches of blood-vessels;
roses up-rooted
soon blown.

Up-rooted for their ground;
left lying
fade quicky; up-rooted
blown roses.

Blood-flow
knows its ground, left rooted;
dries quickly
torn from that place.

Thursday, October 31, 2019



Encroaching onto the landscape

In leisure

                     Forgetful of the Gods

                              Blood

      Hardship

                   Famine

How those soul-sodden fields must detest us

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Vision



The beach was a flood of  sunlight.
We, alone on that long stretch of strand, a dozed
to the clock of the tide marking afternoon time,
sibilance rolling into sonorousness with each wave’s passing.

I remember you walked along the water’s edge,
your white cotton dress a fishing net for the sun
and you were dazzling.

When today I hear a tide’s clamour resounding around a bay,
hear each wave’s commotion echoing into the distance,
and consider the millions of stones turning over,
the endlessness of that beauty strikes hard

against that momentary vision of you,
dressed in light,
playing on the edge of eternity
as the tide drummed an afternoon’s hours away.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Fuchsia,




the blossoms,
elegant little ballerinas,
red as rowan,
bright as Christmas.

August, the bushes
luxuriant along the roadside,
filled with the baritone
drone of a thousand bees.

One blossom, torn
through the sepals,
erupts on the tongue
with the sweetness of honey.

Saturday, October 26, 2019

Green into Grey



When the clouds
Fell onto the hill with the trees,
And they were sinking,
Sinking;
I thought of you.

Those still heads
Belied their stirrings in the murk;
They were swimming,
Swimming;
I was thinking of you.

All day long
Shadows mutely threading that depth,
And they were ghostly,
Ghostly;
I was remembering.

Then, when the sun
At last tore the mist from the trees
They were gleaming,
Gleaming;
And I dreamt of you.

Sunday, October 20, 2019

The After-Mass Men




Remember those figures by the church wall 
Sculpted in after-mass conversations:
Blather-tattooed men
That hung there by their jackets;
Museums with pockets,
Pockets full of knives, pipes and matches.

Stone men:
Pre-Christians defiling Sabbaths
With their Saturday conversations.
Gargoyles:
Coats would be wrapped against them
As though they were sudden showers of hail.

Saturday, October 12, 2019

Only Once Since.



in memory of my mother



When, on an April afternoon,
the countryside was bathed
in pristine  sunlight
And the fields were roaring their green
And the sky above was shifting along
with the most breath-taking speed,
I saw you on the river
And you were happiness
Complete and utter.

I recognized you
Because you would have known that was the way
To send the message.
And, there and then, both of us knew
You would never 
 send another.

Thursday, October 10, 2019

The Poems Are Past.





The poems are past;
goodnight, au revoir.

And life, handed over like a cheque;
good luck, all the best.

Still: an adjective for a man ?
Still ?

Think of rain, bucketing down,
sunshine caught in its strings;

that's how I think of you:
a rainstorm in June; gentle subversive .

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

The Angel and St Feichín



Readers of my blog will be getting familiar with St Feichín by now; I, myself, have taken a great fondness to this 7th century Irish saint. 

He’s got all the powers of a super-hero without the noise of contemporary technology around him; he’s the perfect, early Christian, Jedi master. But better than that, he had all the wonderful traits: abstinent, pleasant, charitable, powerful, emaciated, just-worded, honest, pious, rich in sense, godly, affectionate, discreet, opportune, wise, prayerful………………………………………………..( from a medieval document via a seventeenth century rewriting); yet he was wonderfully contrary, when called back to confront St Ciaran, he walked backwards so as not to look him in the face. And, guess what, he died from a plague, he himself called down.

So here's my version of his call to convert the pagans of Omey.




The Angel and St Feichín

One night a very large bird settled on the roof of the cell in which St Feichín was sleeping; this event occurred at Easdara in the present day County Sligo.

Still there at dawn, the brilliance of the early sun reflecting off its magnificent plumage caused a crowd to gather. And as the morning progressed the crowd swelled further, to such a size, in fact, that their tumult distracted the saint who was at the time in a transport brought on by the deepest meditation. And so, it was not with little annoyance that he emerged from his hut to inquire as to why such a large crowd had gathered in that spot.

When the extraordinary bird saw Feichín, it started up a jabbering that amazed all those who were there. Feichín, for his part, recognizing the bird as a gannet, and knowing that they never travelled so far inland, moved closer to listen and soon found himself conversing in a language, the like of which he had no previous knowledge.

All marvelled at the bird: its gleaming white plumage, the extent of its wings whose span was greater than the width of the cell, the fierce grey eyes which never ventured from the saint’s face, its insistent natter.

The conversation continued for two hours; an engagement between man and bird that had the mouths of all present gaping like the black caves in the hills to the south. Never once were they deflected by the milling of the crowd around them nor stop to wet their throats nor, even once, did the flow of their communication wane.

And then, quite suddenly, around noon, to the amazement of all, the gannet rose with a great pumping of its wings, followed by Feichín who rose from the ground like a leaf gathered up in a gale. Into the sky, side by side, growing smaller and smaller, eventually two black dots like stars that went out, the gannet and Feichín disappeared into the clouds travelling in a southwest direction.

All those that gathered fell to their knees and, as one voice, emitted a howling that was partly extolment of the greatness of God and Feichín, partly lamentation at the taking of their saint.

But it was that same day that Feichín landed on the brightly flowered sward of Omey, and it is since that day that the people of Omey have their faces turned to the one God.

Friday, October 4, 2019

Flight Mechanism



I found a bird
dismantled;
a pair of wings,
still feathered,
on an axis of miniature bones.

Only yesterday,
this anatomical array
imparted the capability of flight.

Head, legs, belly
removed;
I found it,
like a daVinci investigation,
a perfect isolation of the relevant parts.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Life, trains you choose




Life, trains you choose:
hop on, hop off, forget to;
and still no matter how many
you take, you’re only ever in
one carriage,
only ever in the one you’re in.

We could string this out, couldn’t we:
long-distance, short-distance, circle lines;
the country singers have done it all already;
it does strike me though,
the more trains you take,
the less direction you have.

Berry Picking



On a windy day I could hear the conversations speeding through the phone wires:
Roscommon to Dublin, Roscommon to Galway, the Dublin express thrumming through.
I would stand below them,  listening, waiting for one word to fall, mercury-drop perfect,
down past the briars, dog roses, blackthorns, elders, into the can of the young boy’s ear.


Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Peninsula


A peninsula: shingle, cockle and barnacle shells, strips of desiccated wrack,
greened with sea-holly. The wooden cabin, though frequently lashed with spray,
was salted dry, and coloured somewhere between bone and limestone;
I lived there for five months before you came.

From the land our light seemed no more than a single candle burning;
the clothes on our line had the appearance of  rags,
and the smoke from our fire curled into the sky with a nonchalance
that suggested our daily struggles with lighting washed up timbers.

You’ll remember the shingle made walking difficult; with each step the stones rolled.
You said it sounded like the grinding of a mouth full of loose teeth; but, around the bay,
 a billion stones rolled thunderously with each beached wave;
and the  breeding terns came at us like boomerangs.

Nights: we were  unlit stars perhaps, but at one with the universe, free and alive
 in the unbroken expanse of shore, sea and sky; we had  space
 to be colossal, to exhilarate; and moonlight, our spotlight to roar songs into the cosmos,
to take the universe’s light into our eyes and exult in it.

Came the day of migration: wings outstretched, muscles fluid, necks craned to our separate
destinations; we, without backward glances, took to the air
with eyes big enough to countenance the curve of the earth, greedy enough to fly it;
and left our peninsula, a finger  pointing to somewhere .

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Inheriting The Land.


  Emigration seems to be a never-ending feature of Irish life. This poem  is rooted in the Ireland of my childhood.  The boat then had the effect a little death for those left behind.

Inheriting The Land.


Here the sea is no more than a sigh in a shell,
conversations speed past, pole high, Dublin to Galway
and music is the wind whistling beneath a door.
Slightness describes Summer's step,
stonework its skies; a little light drips
from its edges but it's falling from a miser's hand.
Across the fields the church, within its necklace
of dead congregations, is a rusty hinge;
a place filled with a century's stillness.
And the ivy-choked trees lean closer together
like old men guessing at each others' words.

If you were to fly over these patchwork hills,
along the hedgerows and through the lightless haggarts,
you'd never meet a soul. The old farmers are sitting
in their twilight kitchens, their families standing
on the mantelpiece in the other room that's never used
with faces tanned beneath American skies.
Only the din of crows seeps into that silence;
crows more numerous than leaves on the sycamores,
always bickering, hogging the light,
building their cities, staking their inheritance.

Biblical Truth



Don’t look to a rich man to loosen anyone’s chains;
wealth has seldom been amassed with empathy for the impoverished.
Crumbs from the rich man’s table are still the staple;
it’s as it’s always been: easier for a camel to get though the eye of a needle
than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.